Seraphinite Explained

Seraphinite is a trade name for a particular form of clinochlore, a member of the chlorite group.

Seraphinite
Category:Seraphinite mineral
Boxbgcolor:
  1. 3fce68
Formula:(Mg, Fe3+Al(Si3Al)O10(OH)8
System:Monoclinic
Color:green, white, colourless
Mohs:2–2.5
Luster:Pearly, dull, greasy
Refractive:1.571–1.597
Opticalprop:Biaxial (–)
Birefringence:0.005–0.011
Fluorescence:inert
Streak:light green
Gravity:2.600–3.000
Diaphaneity:transparent, translucent to opaque

Seraphinite apparently acquired its name due to its resemblance to feathers due to its chatoyancy. Seraphinite is named after the biblical seraphs or seraphim angels.[1] With some specimens the resemblance is quite strong, with shorter down-like feathery growths leading into longer "flight feathers"; the resemblance even spurs fanciful marketing phrases like "silver plume seraphinite." Seraphinite is generally dark green to gray in color, has chatoyancy, and has hardness between 2 and 4 on the Mohs scale of mineral hardness.

Seraphinite is mined in a limited area of eastern Siberia in Russia. Russian mineralogist Nikolay Koksharov (1818-1892 or 1893) is often credited with its discovery. It occurs in the Korshunovskoye iron skarn deposit in the Irkutskaya Oblast of Eastern Siberia.[2]

Notes and References

  1. http://www.gemdat.org/gem-27184.html Seraphinite on Gemdat
  2. http://www.mindat.org/min-27184.html Seraphinite on Mindat